On the road to Unesco!

The application drawn up by the Paysages des Mégalithes de Carnac et du sud Morbihan association has a good chance of being accepted by Unesco and joining the list of World Heritage sites.

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  • 27 municipalities
  • 550 sites listed

In order to protect these ancient monuments and promote this exceptional heritage, the towns are pooling their resources to register the megaliths of southern Morbihan as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The Paysages de Mégalithes association was set up in 2013 to work on the UNESCO World Heritage project.The UNESCO application for the megaliths of Carnac and the banks of the Morbihan brings together 27 towns, the Morbihan Departmental Council, two Établissements Publics de Coopération Intercommunale (EPCI), the Morbihan Department, the Centre des Monuments Nationaux (CMN), the Conservatoire du Littoral, the Brittany Region, numerous associations and associated towns, notably Vannes and Auray.The Carnac region and the shores of the Morbihan are not the only places in Brittany, or even in France, where megalithic monuments can be seen.However, the age of the sites, the sheer number of monuments, the diversity of structures represented, some of which are found nowhere else (bent dolmen), the monumentality of the three exceptional tumuli (Mané er Hroeck, Mont-Saint-Michel and Tumiac), the singularity and abundance of engravings found (at Gavrinis, for example), the archaeological wealth of the objects found on the sites... make this a truly unique site in the world.These different elements combined to create, thousands of years ago, a symbolic landscape focused on the coast. Yves Coppens, a world-famous scientist, one of the discoverers of Lucy, long considered to be the oldest australopithecine skeleton known to mankind, a renowned palaeontologist and lover of the megaliths of Carnac, was the driving force behind the project until June 2022, when he passed away.the association is now chaired by Olivier Lepick, Mayor of Carnac. The scientific committee is made up of eighteen French and European archaeologists specialising in megalithism. The timetable for the UNESCO bid has been confirmed, with France submitting its application to the World Heritage Centre in January 2024. The international assessment process has been set up to run for eighteen months, until the summer of 2025. To find out more about the UNESCO listing, discover which sites are involved, receive information about the progress of the application, take part in meetings or just support the association, visit the association's website : megalithes-morbihan.fr